The present invention relates to a method enabling quantification of dose delivery in radiotherapy treatment during patient-specific treatment of the patient utilizing measurements in predefined time-intervals with information means positioned in the radiation beam, between the patient and the source and converting the readings to corresponding measures in a phantom. The invention additionally covers the method to obtain the said calibration factors for the detectors. The said calibration factors are obtained for each information means, field and said definable time-interval simultaneously irradiating the information means and said phantom including detectors to measure the absorbed dose using the said patient-specific treatment without patient.
|
1. Method for enabling quantification of dose delivery in radiotherapy treatment, characterized in that it comprises the steps of
irradiating a phantom,
obtaining measurements in said phantom,
collecting information regarding the irradiation by information means arranged between the phantom and the radiation source, wherein said measurements are divided in time-intervals,
analysing the measurements, and
obtaining information regarding the relationship between the measurements in the phantom and the information between the phantom and the treatment source at each time-interval, which relationship information is to be used as verification of the treatment of a patient.
24. Method for enabling quantification of dose delivery in radiotherapy treatment, characterized in that it comprises the steps of
irradiating of a phantom,
obtaining measurements in said phantom,
collecting information regarding the irradiation by information means arranged between the phantom and the radiation source, wherein said measurements are divided in time-intervals, characterized in that the information means comprises the position of Multi Leaf Collimator leafs (MLC) arranged for shaping the irradiating beam of the radiation source,
analysing the measurements,
obtaining information regarding the relationship between the measurements in the phantom and the information between the phantom and the treatment source at each time-interval, which relationship information is to be used as verification of the treatment of a patient, and
calculating calibration factors from the obtained relationship information as the ratio of the reading from information from the information means and the measurements along the radiation ray in the phantom, characterized in that the calibration factors are calculated according to
Caln,f,p,t(i),t(i+1)=Fn,f,t(i),t(i+1)/(Df,p,t(i),t(i+1)) where
Df,p,t(i),t(i+1) The dose in point p in the phantom at the field (projection), f integrated from time t(i) until t(i+1)
Fn,f,t(i),t(i+1) The radiation fluency in the field, f, between the patient and the source along the ray that intersects point p in the phantom integrated from time t(i) until t(i+1)
Caln,f,p,t(i),t(i+1) The calibration factor describing the relation between the fluency between the patient and the source and the dose in the phantom.
22. Method for enabling quantification of dose delivery in radiotherapy treatment, characterized in that it comprises the steps of
irradiating of a phantom,
obtaining measurements in said phantom,
collecting information regarding the irradiation by information means arranged between the phantom and the radiation source, wherein said measurements are divided in time-intervals, characterized in that the information means comprises detectors (ExtDet),
analysing the measurements,
obtaining information regarding the relationship between the measurements in the phantom and the information between the phantom and the treatment source at each time-interval, which relationship information is to be used as verification of the treatment of a patient, and
calculating calibration factors from the obtained relationship information as the ratio of the reading from information from the information means and the measurements alone the radiation ray in the phantom, characterized in that the calibration factor are calculated according to,
Caln,f,seg−n,f,p,t(i),t(i+1)=Sn,f,t(i),t(i+1)/(Dseg−n,f,p,t(i),t(i+1)) where
Dseg−n,f,p,t(i),t(i+1) The dose in point p in the phantom-segment defined by the DetExt detector-element, n and the field (projection), f integrated from time t(i) until t(i+1)
Sn,f,t(i),t(i+1)The signal from the ExtDet detector-element, n, in the field, f, integrated from time t(i) until t(i+1)
Caln,f,seg−n,f,p,t(i),t(i+1) The calibration factor to be used with ExtDet detector-element n, in the field, f, to convert the signal integrated from time t(i) until t(i+1) to achieve the dose in the point p in the phantom-segment defined by the DetExt detector-element, n and the field (projection), f integrated from time t(i) until t(i+1).
2. Method according to
3. Method according to
4. Method according to
5. Method according to
6. Method according to
7. Method according to any of
8. Method according to any of
9. Method according to
10. Method according to
11. Method according to
12. Method according to any
13. Method according to
14. Method according
15. Method according to
Dseg−n,f,p,t(i),t(i+1)=Sn,f,t(i),t(i+1)/Caln,f,seg−n,f,p,t(i),t(i+1). 16. Method according to any of the
17. Method according to
18. Method according to
19. Method according to any of
20. Computer program product capable of enabling a computer to perform the method according to any of the
21. Computer program product capable of enabling a computer to perform the method according to any of the
23. Method according to
25. Method according to
26. Method according to
Df,p,t(i),t(i+1)=Fn,f,t(i),t(i+1)/Caln,f,p,t(i),t(i+1). 27. Method according to any of
28. Method according to
|
The present invention relates to a method for calibrating detectors intended for use in an apparatus for radiotherapy during treatment of a patient to verify the accuracy of the delivered dose to the patient.
Radiotherapy has been used to treat cancer in the human body since early 1900. Even though radiation of cancer tumours is known to be efficient, mortality rate for many cancers remained virtually unchanged for a long time. The major reasons for this have been the inability to control the primary tumour or the occurrence of metastases. Only by improving the local control may the treatment be more effective. In the last years Treatment Planning Systems, TPS, in Radiation Therapy have developed extensively and is now able to take into account the anatomy of the specific patient and in a time efficient way plan a more optimised treatment for each individual patient, homogenous dose to the target and minimum dose to risk-organs.
The treatment technique to deliver this optimised treatment is more complicated than conventional treatments because each field must be modulated laterally in intensity and thereby compensate for the heterogeneity and contour of the patient, the technique is called IMRT—Intensity Modulated Radiation Therapy. The delivery can be done using compensators, filters that reduce the intensity to a predefined level in each part of the field due to attenuation of the primary photon beam. However when using several fields (4-8), each field requiring individual compensators, this technique is time consuming and requires a lot of effort. Additionally the attenuation of the beam also causes unwanted change of the spectral distribution in the beam, thereby complicating the whole process. The most common way to deliver the IMRT fields will therefore be to use the MLC (Multi Leaf Collimator) a device that consists of thin blocks (Leafs) that can be individually positioned to block a small part of the field and thereby shape the beam in the lateral direction to various irregular shapes. By moving the Leafs during the treatment each part of the treated volume will be irradiated during various time and thereby the intensity over the treated area is modulated.
The new treatment technique however impose that the patient is exactly in the position expected, something not always easy to achieve. Additionally the requirements on accurate dose delivery increase and thereby the requirements on quality control (QC) of the treatment machine, the planning process and finally during the treatment, increase. New verification and QC are to be used. However very little has been published on measurements during treatment, In Vivo dosimetry.
Traditional In Vivo dosimetry, measuring with a detector on the skin of the patient to predict the dose inside the patient is very demanding already with a fixed field (conventional therapy) due to limitations in the TPS (Treatment Planning System) to predict the dose distribution in the region of the patient where externally generated secondary electrons contribute significantly to the delivered dose e.g. build-up region (the part where the beam enters the patient and to a depth 5-35 mm into the patient). Thereby neither the surface or skin dose or the dose in air up-streams the patient can be accurately predicted by the TPS in fixed fields and the difficulty increases with a dynamically delivered treatment. In fixed fields this is solved either by using a special design of the detector, by general calibration or a combination of the two. In IMRT treatments it is not that easy to handle this either by general calibration or design due to the fact that the varying intensity in the field is patient specific. The traditional In Vivo dosimetry is normally not used at each fraction and thereby the perturbation of the specially designed detectors becomes negligible. The small margins in IMRT treatments require extended dosimetry and quality control also at each fraction to minimise the uncertainties and therefore the perturbation of the detectors used in conventional therapy becomes significant. Additionally when using IMRT, measurements must be done in many points to verify the field's topography and the lateral position of the detectors is very critical. To simplify the problem it has been suggested to just measure the fluence in air. However, then the discrepancy from the predicted values will be difficult to judge due to lack of understandable quantification.
Alternatively to traditional in vivo dosimetry it has been proposed to use imaging systems positioned down-streams the patient, film or EPID (Electronic Portal Imaging Device) where the device is calibrated to measure dose. Such a method is discussed in “Portal dose image prediction for dosimetric treatment verification in radiotherapy I: and algorithm for open beam”, by K. I. Pasma et al., Medical Physics 25(6), pages 830-840, 1998. A comparison can then be done with calculated dose distribution using e.g. the TPS (Treatment Planning System) at the position of the measuring device. An example of this is described in “In Vivo dosimetry for prostate cancer patients using an electronic portal imaging device; demonstration of internal organ motion”, by M. Kroonwijk et al., Radiotherapy and Oncology. 49(2), pages 125-132, 1998. Another alternative is to calculate the dose distribution in the patient from the measured dose distribution in the EPID. This is disclosed in “Modelling the dose distribution to an EPID with collapsed cone kernel superposition”, C. Vallhagen Dahlgren et al., Workshop in Uppsala, Mar. 13, 2001, organised by the company MDS Nordion.
The latter has the benefit of providing data that is more easily understandable. However measurement down-streams the patient alone will always be less accurate than combined with measurements up-streams the patient and will thereby not distinguish if the deviation was caused due to incorrect dose delivery by the treatment machine or due to positioning errors or change in anatomy of the patient (the patient might loose weight etc. from original diagnostics). The latter is important not least in order to analyse the root of the deviation and thereby to prevent it from occurring in the next treatment-fraction (normally a patient receives 30 fractions before the treatment is completed).
The aim of the present invention is to separate the dose verification from the patient-positioning verification during Radio Therapy treatment of a patient and provide a method to perform the dose verification. The invention is thereby a method to calibrate the detectors to be used In Vivo (during treatment) in a time-efficient and accurate way to achieve high quality, reliable dose measurements during treatment.
This aim is achieved by a method characterised by claim 1. Preferable embodiments of the invention are characterised by the dependent claims.
According to one aspect of the invention it is characterised by the steps of irradiation of a phantom, measurement in said phantom, measurement with detectors (ExtDet) between the patient and the radiation source, wherein said measurements are divided in time-intervals, and analysing the measurements for obtaining information regarding the relationship between the measurements in the phantom and between the patient and the treatment source at each time-interval, which information can be used in the treatment of the patient.
According to the invention the relationship between the measurements may be utilised in different ways.
Because the measurements in the phantom and by the detectors are stored in specific time-intervals a proportionality is obtained between the measurements and a fluence reference can be defined. This enables the calculation of calibration factors for the detectors, which are used in the subsequent treatment of the patient, In Vivo measurement.
The readings from such In Vivo measurements shall after applying the calibration factors predict the dose inside a phantom as if it was in place. The quantification of a deviation in dose distribution can thereby be used to judge if the deviation is acceptable or not. In most cases this verification of the dose delivery will be sufficient, providing similar results as the off-line verification.
The verification of the patient positioning can then be done in a traditional way using an EPID or other methods could be used e.g. using a diagnostic x-ray source and transmission detector in a projection out of the treatment beam (called image guided radio Therapy). The use of diagnostic x-ray source would have the benefit of extensive improvement in image-contrast and thereby position accuracy, as is well known in the art.
An alternative may be a fluence verification where a reference value for each time-interval is obtained for the ExtDet comparing the integrated value for all time intervals with an integrated measurement in the phantom. A combination with back projection from the EPID-images or as an input to the treatment planning system could give quantitative dose data in the patient.
After verifying major deviations in dose delivery and/or patient positioning a second step can be to combine the two and thereby predict the dose distribution in the patient for more precise checks of dose to the tumour, risk-organs etc. This data from one fraction or accumulated for several fractions can be used to modify the treatment plan for the remaining treatment fractions and thereby compensate for the earlier deviations. Such an adaptive treatment technology can be updated after each fraction if required.
Another alternative to measure the fluence with the detector up-streams the patient, ExtDet, is to calculate the fluence using any information of the MLC positions as input and then calibrate that fluence using the described method, eg. calibrate the fluence for each time interval to dose measured in the phantom during the pre treatment verification. Such a determination of the dose in the phantom will be limited in accuracy and verification compared to the use of an ExtDet but still very useful because it enables quantification of deviations during treatment as dose in the phantom as if it was in place.
These and other aspects of, and advantages with, the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description and from the accompanying drawings.
In the following detailed description, reference will be made to the accompanying drawings, of which
A radiotherapy device utilised for treating tumours with radiation is shown schematically in
A table 22 is arranged for a patient 20 to lie on. The table is rotatable around a vertical axis, and movable horizontally and vertically in order to place the area to be treated of the patient in the area of the beam. Further, the method according to the invention utilises different detectors for measuring the radiation emitted from the radiotherapy device. They may for example comprise real-time detectors for measurement on surface skin 14, such as semiconductor detector, gas detector, scintillator detector etc. The detector device might be thin or including a build-up to reduce the dependency on scatter radiation. It might also be designed in a way that it is evenly thick measured in g/cm2 over its entire area thereby taking into account the various density in encapsulation and the detector itself at a typical beam modality.
The detectors may also be detectors for measurement in-between radiation source and phantom/patient like for example imaging systems such as film or EPID. The detectors are connected to suitable signal processing means (not shown). The above mentioned details are well known to the man skilled in the art and will not be described in detail.
The method according to the present invention is aimed at utilising the above-mentioned equipment in order to enable quantification of dose delivery in radiotherapy treatment, in particular during patient-specific treatment of the patient (from now on called In Vivo) utilising measurements in predefined time-interval with detectors (from now on called ExtDet) positioned in the radiation beam, between the patient and the source and converting the readings to corresponding measures in a phantom using the proportionality between the measurements of the detectors and the measures in the phantom.
The method according to the present invention is further aimed at preferably obtaining calibration factors for the ExtDet. The said calibration factors are obtained for each ExtDet per point in the defined segment in the phantom 36,
An example of utilising the method according to the invention may be described with the following steps:
The readings from all time-intervals for each specific dose point in the phantom can be totalised to present the total dose in that point for each respectively field according to
The dose from all fields to each specific point can then be totalised to present the total dose in all points for the complete treatment fraction (a complete treatment consists of several fractions given over several days or weeks). The total dose in each point can directly be compared with the result from the treatment planning system when applied on the phantom similar to the off-line verification (pre treatment verification).
Deviations between the measured and calculated dose values can be analysed by using the data for each time-interval and thereby simplifying the analysing phase.
If the deviation is caused by incorrect motion of the leaves the calculated dose value in the phantom might be slightly incorrect and in such a case the exact value can be verified using a phantom measurement simulating the motion during the miss-delivered treatment.
The position of the ExtDet can be determined in the transversal plane on the phantom and in particular on the patient using the projection of the detectors or markers well defined to the ExtDet utilising the image from an image device down streams the phantom e.g. EPID or radiographic film.
Incorrect positioning of the patient in the field compared to the detector can be visualised using markers on the detector device that light-up on the EPID image e.g. lead-seeds. Using several projections the positioning of the patient can be defined.
The alternative of a fluence verification of the integrated dose in the phantom with the treatment plan and simultaneously measured reference signals with ExtDet in each time-interval where the (Sn,f,t(i), t(i+1) is proportional to the (Dseg−n,f,p,t(i),t(i+1) makes it possible to estimate the deviation in fluence for each time-interval during treatment although it is not directly convertible into dose in the phantom.
An alternative to measure the fluence with the detector up-streams the patient, ExtDet, is to calculate the fluence using any information of the MLC positions as input and then calibrate that fluence using the described method, eg. calibrate the fluence for each time interval to dose measured in the phantom during the pre treatment verification. Such a determination of the dose in the phantom will be limited in accuracy and verification compared to the use of an ExtDet but still very useful because it enables quantification of deviations during treatment as dose in the phantom as if it was in place. The information regarding the MLC positions is easily obtainable since there is already provided means in the radio therapy device for controlling the position of the MLC leaves. This information can then be used in the comparison with the measurements inside the phantom.
When using the information of the MLC positions, the calibration factors may be calculated according to
Caln,f,p,t(i),t(i+1)=Fn,f,t(i),t(i+1)/(Df,p,t(i), t(i+1))
where
The readings from all time-intervals for each specific dose point in the phantom can be totalised to present the total dose in that point for each respectively field according to
The method according to the invention may be implemented in the control and measurement system of the radiotherapy device, and thereby using the processor and storage means available there. It may of course be implemented in a stand-alone unit comprising the necessary equipment such as a central processing unit CPU performing the steps of the method according to the invention. This is performed with the aid of a dedicated computer program, which is stored in the program memory. It is to be understood that the computer program may also be run on a general purpose industrial computer instead of a specially adapted computer.
The software includes computer program code elements or software code portions that make the computer perform the method using equations, algorithms, data and calculations previously described. A part of the program may be stored in a processor as above, but also in a ROM, RAM, PROM or EPROM chip or similar. The program in part or in whole may also be stored on, or in, other suitable computer readable medium such as a magnetic disk, CD-ROM or DVD disk, hard disk, magneto-optical memory storage means, in volatile memory, in flash memory, as firmware, or stored on a data server.
It is to be understood that the above description of the invention and the accompanying drawings is to be regarded as a non-limiting example thereof and that the scope of protection is defined by the appended patent claims.
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
10016173, | Feb 22 2012 | Carestream Health, Inc. | Mobile radiographic apparatus/methods with tomosynthesis capability |
10165992, | Dec 18 2014 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | X-ray imaging systems and devices |
10449385, | Jul 18 2014 | Samsung Life Public Welfare Foundation | Radiation therapy device and quality control method for radiation therapy device |
10463325, | Feb 22 2012 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | Mobile radiographic apparatus/methods with tomosynthesis capability |
11633629, | Jul 17 2013 | VISION RT LIMITED | Method of calibration of a stereoscopic camera system for use with a radio therapy treatment apparatus |
8821017, | Apr 13 2010 | Carestream Health, Inc. | Projector as collimator light |
8824634, | Apr 13 2010 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | Configurable AEC sensor for an X-ray system |
8827554, | Apr 13 2010 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | Tube alignment for mobile radiography system |
8867705, | Apr 13 2010 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | Display of AEC sensor location |
8873712, | Apr 13 2010 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | Exposure control using digital radiography detector |
9155509, | Apr 13 2010 | Carestream Health, Inc. | Tube alignment for mobile radiography system |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
5334851, | Feb 15 1991 | Eastman Kodak Company; University of Pittsburgh | Computed radiography patient identification system |
5533508, | Oct 31 1991 | PDT Systems, Inc. | Vivo dosimeter for photodynamic therapy |
5635709, | Oct 12 1995 | Carl Zeiss AG | Method and apparatus for measuring radiation dose distribution |
5757021, | Feb 17 1995 | AGFA HEALTHCARE N V | Identification system and method for use in the field of digital radiography |
5769779, | Apr 27 1995 | Radiology Support Devices, Inc.; RADIOLOGY SUPPORT DEVICES, INC | Method and apparatus for accurate radiation dosage control in breast cancer treatment |
5818902, | Mar 01 1996 | ELEKTA AB | Intensity modulated arc therapy with dynamic multi-leaf collimation |
5844241, | Jul 19 1996 | City of Hope | System and method for determining internal radioactivity and absorbed dose estimates |
5938605, | Feb 06 1995 | Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH | Measuring process and sensor for on-line in-vivo determination of the tissue-equivalent dose in radiotherapy |
6047257, | Mar 01 1997 | AGFA HEALTHCARE N V | Identification of medical images through speech recognition |
6225622, | Jul 31 1998 | Dynamic radiation scanning device | |
6271536, | Oct 08 1997 | AGFA NV | Radiographic image identification method |
6298115, | Jan 13 2000 | Scanditronix Medical AB | Method for calibrating a detector means |
6364529, | Oct 20 2000 | MEDTEC, INC | Radiation phantom |
6493574, | Sep 28 2000 | Koninklijke Philips Electronics N V | Calibration phantom and recognition algorithm for automatic coordinate transformation in diagnostic imaging |
6594336, | Mar 14 2001 | Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha | Absorption dose measuring apparatus for intensity modulated radio therapy |
6697452, | Feb 16 2001 | BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF LELAND STANFORD JUNIOR UNIVERSITY, THE | Verification method of monitor units and fluence map in intensity modulated radiation therapy |
6714620, | Sep 22 2000 | Numerix, LLC | Radiation therapy treatment method |
6800870, | Dec 20 2000 | Michel, Sayag | Light stimulating and collecting methods and apparatus for storage-phosphor image plates |
6811079, | Dec 22 1998 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | Sheet media package having radio-frequency identification transponder |
6904162, | Nov 12 1998 | BRITISH COLUMBIA, THE UNIVERSITY OF | Film phantom for three-dimensional dosimetry |
6907105, | Sep 25 2001 | British Columbia Cancer Agency Branch | Methods and apparatus for planning and delivering intensity modulated radiation fields with a rotating multileaf collimator |
6945713, | Sep 18 2000 | CARESTREAM HEALTH, INC | Sheet media package having radio-frequency identification transponder |
7024026, | Jan 20 2005 | Radiological Imaging Technology, Inc. | Relative calibration for dosimetric devices |
7095034, | Dec 17 2003 | AGFA NV | Image carrier for storing X-ray information, and a system and method for processing an image carrier |
20020012999, | |||
20020106054, | |||
20030068009, | |||
20050010110, | |||
20050197564, | |||
20060017009, | |||
20060027756, | |||
20060203967, | |||
20060219945, | |||
DE19907774, |
Executed on | Assignor | Assignee | Conveyance | Frame | Reel | Doc |
Date | Maintenance Fee Events |
Dec 12 2007 | ASPN: Payor Number Assigned. |
Jul 06 2011 | M2551: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 4th Yr, Small Entity. |
Jul 13 2011 | ASPN: Payor Number Assigned. |
Jul 13 2011 | RMPN: Payer Number De-assigned. |
Aug 24 2015 | M2552: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 8th Yr, Small Entity. |
Aug 21 2019 | M2553: Payment of Maintenance Fee, 12th Yr, Small Entity. |
Date | Maintenance Schedule |
Mar 18 2011 | 4 years fee payment window open |
Sep 18 2011 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Mar 18 2012 | patent expiry (for year 4) |
Mar 18 2014 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 4) |
Mar 18 2015 | 8 years fee payment window open |
Sep 18 2015 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Mar 18 2016 | patent expiry (for year 8) |
Mar 18 2018 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 8) |
Mar 18 2019 | 12 years fee payment window open |
Sep 18 2019 | 6 months grace period start (w surcharge) |
Mar 18 2020 | patent expiry (for year 12) |
Mar 18 2022 | 2 years to revive unintentionally abandoned end. (for year 12) |